Candlestick PatternsDownside Tasuki Gap
Candlestick Patterns

Downside Tasuki GapPattern

"Master the Bearish Continuation signal that outlines a critical shift in market sentiment."

Definition

The Downside Tasuki Gap Candlestick Pattern is a bearish continuation pattern that appears during a strong downtrend. It indicates that sellers remain firmly in control, even after buyers attempt a short-lived recovery to close the gap. It emphasizes that gaps can act as resistance zones.

In Simple Words

"Price gaps down in a downtrend, buyers try to fill the gap, but sellers defend the gap and continue lower."

Core Message

  • Sellers create a gap with authority.
  • Buyers attempt a recovery.
  • Sellers successfully defend the gap.

Visual Interpretation

Let’s break the candle visually and logically.

1

First Candle (Bearish)

Bearish real body, part of an ongoing downtrend.

2

Second Candle (Gap Down)

Opens below first close, creates a clear downside gap, confirms selling pressure.

3

Third Candle (Bullish Test)

Opens within second body, fails to close the gap fully.

"Sellers create a gap, buyers attempt to fill it but fail, and the downtrend remains intact."

Market Psychology

1

Context

Market in a clear downtrend

Selling pressure is dominant

Sentiment is negative

2

Trend

Sellers maintain control

Downtrend structure remains intact

3

Drop

Strong supply forces price sharply lower

Buyers unavailable to respond

Market shows urgency

4

Defense

Buyers attempt to fill the gap

Sellers step in before gap is closed

Gap remains open and respected

"The market shifts from total fear (Phase 1) to confident realization (Phase 4) in a single session."

Technical Identification

Pattern Formation Rules

Appears within an established downtrend

Why? Continuation requirement.

First candle is bearish

Why? Trend alignment.

Second candle is bearish and gaps down

Why? Momentum drop.

Third candle is bullish

Why? Pullback attempt.

Third candle opens within second body

Why? Controlled buying.

Third candle does not fill gap fully

Why? Gap defense.

Gap remains partially open

Why? Bearish resistance.

Strict Rule: If visual conditions are not met, the pattern is invalid.

Ideal Market Conditions

Downside Tasuki Gap works best when:

  • In a strong trending market
  • After bearish breakdowns
  • News-driven sell-offs
  • High participation selling phases
  • On higher timeframes (Daily, Weekly)

"Weak context: Sideways markets, low-volume gaps, exhaustion gaps late in a decline."

Signal Verification

Confirmation

Are sellers willing to continue defending lower levels?

  • Price holding below the gap area
  • Bearish follow-through after the pattern
  • Alignment with trend structure
  • Resistance formed by the gap
Warning

Without confirmation: The defense of the gap itself suggests continuation.

Failure Conditions

  • The gap is completely filled
  • Buyers regain control quickly
  • The broader downtrend weakens
  • The gap forms near strong long-term support
Truth: A defended gap confirms trend strength — a filled gap warns of weakness.

Common Misconceptions

"Any gap in a downtrend is Downside Tasuki Gap"

Must follow specific 3-candle structure.

"The third candle must be large"

Size matters less than gap defense.

"All gaps eventually fill immediately"

Tasuki gaps show open gaps can last.

Final Explanation in One Line

"A Downside Tasuki Gap does not show panic — it shows commitment by sellers to defend lower prices. Understanding why gaps resist retracement is the real educational edge."

Quick Facts

Difficulty
Intermediate
Category
Candlestick Pattern
Type
Gap

Who Should Use This

Beginners

Learn why gaps can act as resistance.

Intermediate

Combine gap analysis with trend confirmation.

Advanced

Use gap defense as evidence of institutional selling.

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Detailed video breakdown is in production.

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Written By: Editorial Team

Disclaimer: While due care has been taken to ensure the accuracy, clarity, and relevance of the information, the content is intended solely for educational purposes. Financial terms and concepts are interpretative tools; readers are strongly advised to verify information from multiple sources and apply their own judgment. This content does not constitute financial, investment, or advisory recommendations of any kind.

Published: Feb 2026Written By: Editorial Team

Disclaimer:While due care is taken to ensure the accuracy and clarity of information provided, the sheer complexity of data arrangements may lead to unintentional discrepancies. This content is for educational purposes only. Financial markets involve significant risk; readers are strongly advised to verify information from multiple sources and apply their own judgment. This does not constitute financial or investment advice.